Marijuana growers operating legally in Colorado and Washington state took another hit from the federal government on Tuesday when the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation announced that pot growers are (still) not allowed to use federal irrigation waters.
Since 1902, the bureau 
has been charged with maintaining dams, power plants and canals in the 
17 "western states" — from North Dakota, Nebraska and Texas to 
Washington, Oregon and California.
        
As such, the agency also
 provides irrigation for millions of acres of agriculture in Washington 
and Colorado, the two states that recently made recreational marijuana 
legal for adults. 
But the bureau wants weed growers to know that, at least at the federal level, the times they aren't a-changing. 
So, on Tuesday it reclarified a law that has been in place for decades.
        
"As a federal agency, 
Reclamation is obligated to adhere to federal law in the conduct of its 
responsibilities to the American people," Dan DuBray, chief of public 
affairs, said in a statement to NBC News. 
The bureau says it had been fielding questions from all points west on the use of water in pot operations.
        
On Tuesday, in what's called a "temporary policy" decision, the bureau reiterated that federal law still rules. 
"Reclamation will 
operate its facilities and administer its water-related contracts in a 
manner that is consistent with the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, as
 amended. This includes locations where state law has decriminalized or 
authorized the cultivation of marijuana. Reclamation will refer any 
inconsistent uses of federal resources of which it becomes aware to the 
Department of Justice and coordinate with the proper enforcement 
authorities," it said.
        
"Pretty soon it's going to be air. They're going to say you can't use the air because it belongs to the federal government."
That
 last line means that the bureau won't actually be enforcing the law so 
much as letting the Justice Department know when it believes marijuana 
growers are using federal water. It's also the responsibility of local 
bureaus and state offices to regulate who gets approved to use federal 
irrigation. 
The decision is termed 
"temporary" because a permanent policy decision would require a lengthy 
process that includes public hearings.
        
According to the bureau, it delivers water to about 1.2 million acres of irrigated land each in Colorado and Washington. 
![]()  | 
| The Hoover Dam, in Nevada, is operated by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. | 
Still, it remained unclear what sort of penalties legal weed growers who used federal irrigation waters would face. 
In a statement to NBC 
News, Justice Department spokeswoman Ellen Canale said, "The Department 
of Justice will continue to enforce the Controlled Substances Act and 
will focus federal resources on the most significant threats to our 
communities. Our efforts will be guided by the eight factors set forth 
in the August 29, 2013 guidance memorandum." 
Those eight factors
 (PDF) are: preventing the distribution of marijuana to minors; 
preventing its revenue from going to criminal enterprises; preventing 
diversion to states where it is illegal; preventing state-authorized 
marijuana activity from being used as a cover for other illegal drug 
activity; preventing violence and the use of firearms in the cultivation
 of marijuana; preventing drugged driving and other adverse public 
health consequences; preventing growing of marijuana on public lands; 
and preventing marijuana possession or use on federal property. 
Meanwhile, many in the 
burgeoning legal marijuana industry saw Tuesday's announcement as more 
of the same in terms of federal harassment for something that is 
sanctioned at the local level.
        
"It looks like another 
case of public officials acting against the better interests of 
themselves and their constituency due to a lack of critical thinking," 
Naomi McCulloch with Green Lion Farms in Seattle, and a member of the 
Association of Cannabis Breeders and Growers, told NBC News. 
But she believed her fellow growers would find solutions to be completely independent of federal water.
        
"The general feeling is
 that there are ways to get water, if one source closes, another will 
open. It takes a lot of fortitude and planning to be a farmer, of any 
crop. If the government throwing up obstacles to our success stopped us,
 we wouldn't have made it this far," McCulloch said. 
"We're used to this 
kind of treatment, the federal government looking for one obstacle after
 another to place hurdles before this industry," Elan Nelson, business 
consultant for Medicine Man dispensary in Denver, told The Associated 
Press. "We'll just have to find a way to deal with it and move on."
        
Since California 
legalized medical marijuana in 1996, 19 states have followed its lead, 
and last year Colorado and Washington became the first to allow 
recreational use of the drug.
        
But federal authorities
 from the DEA to the FBI to the IRS have often targeted those businesses
 who set up shop legally under state laws. And banks, universities and 
other institutions subject to federal oversight have shunned the 
legalized pot industry.
        
Source: NBC News
Source: NBC News


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